Tinder, Grindr accused of illegally sharing user data
Popular dating apps like Tinder and Grindr are sharing the personal data of their users to third parties in breach of European Union (EU) regulations, a Norwegian consumer rights group said Tuesday.
A new report by the Norwegian Consumer Council (NCC) details how Grindr, which markets itself as the “world’s largest social networking app for gay, bi, trans and queer people,” shares the GPS data, IP addresses, ages and genders of its users with a multitude of third-party companies to help them improve advert targeting.
Article continues after this advertisementAccording to the government-funded nonprofit organization, the sharing of this data implicitly discloses users’ sexual orientations.
The report, titled “Out of Control,” examines the collection and use of personal data by 10 popular apps and concludes that the advertising industry is “systematically breaking the law.”
“Every time you open an app like Grindr, advertisement networks get your GPS location, device identifiers and even the fact that you use a gay dating app,” Austrian activist Max Schrems said in a statement by the NCC.
Article continues after this advertisement“This is an insane violation of users’ EU privacy rights,” Schrems said.
The dating app Tinder is also accused of sharing user data with at least 45 companies owned by the Match Group, which operates a dating website of the same name.
The report also criticized other applications, such as Qibla Finder, which orients Muslims towards Mecca for prayer; Clue and MyDays used for monitoring fertility periods and the children’s app My Talking Tom 2.
Some 20 months since the EU’s General Data Protection Regulation took effect in May 2018, “consumers are still pervasively tracked and profiled online,” the report said.
Users “have no way of knowing which entities process their data and how to stop them,” it added.
“Consumers have no meaningful ways to resist or otherwise protect themselves from the effects of profiling (including) different forms of discrimination and exclusion,” the statement said.
The NCC lodged complaints against Grindr and five of its partners with Norway’s data protection agency.
Grindr, which is owned by Chinese gaming company Beijing Kunlun Tech, did not immediately respond to a request for comment. The group told The New York Times that it could not comment on a report that it had not seen. RGA
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